Web Clips and Comments
July 14, 2003
HIGHLIGHT: This weekend, the Soufriere Hills Volcano, in my second home 
  territory, Monsterrat; had a massive dome collapse and associated ash eruption 
  that threw volcanic materials 40,000 feet into the air, and deposited a thick 
  layer of ash across much of the South and centre of the island. 
Thankfully no-one was killed, and the main ash flow from the dome -- a mound 
  of hot materials that had been forced out of the volcano over the past several 
  months (piling up to 3600 feet above sea level) -- went down the Tar River valley 
  to the N E, and off into the sea on the East Coast.
Contacts in Montserrat are grateful that lives have been spared, and the few 
  buildings in the Salem area that have collapsed under the weight of deposited 
  ash were in the main lightly built structures, such as bars. Concern was expressed 
  for the welfare of some of the people evacuated over the past several months, 
  who are in need of welfare support, especially support for basic food and similar 
  needs. 
(NB: In the 1995 - 97 period, as concluded by a Commission of Inquiry, inadequate 
  shelter conditions, poor management of exposure to hazards and desensitisation 
  to danger as well as personal reckless disregard for the danger contributed 
  to the deaths of over a dozen people in the June 25, 1997 collapse and pyroclastic 
  flows. Official figures hover at about 20 deaths for the June - August 1997 
  events.)
Web links:
Preliminary AFP report: http://www.thecouriermail.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5936,6749194%5E401,00.html 
Monstserrat Volcano Observatory: http://www.mvo.ms/
Cascades Volcano Observatory: http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/
Nat. Geog. Article: http://www.nationalgeographic.com/features/98/volcanoes/
Montserrat Reporter newspaper: http://www.montserratreporter.org/
  1. Mbeki Speaks on Africa
http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20030710/cleisure/cleisure4.html
Next year Haiti commemorates a full two hundred years of the establishment 
  of the first modern black republic out of the defeat of the Napoleonic French 
  empire in 1804. South Africa will celebrate 10 years of the post-Apartheid era. 
  And the two countries, one the poorest in the Diaspora, the other the leader 
  of the Black Motherland, will do it together. Mbeki asked the hard questions 
  of what went wrong with the Haitian Revolution, when the sister American and 
  French Revolutions brought such different results for freedom and development. 
  What went wrong with the African decolonisation, freedom and development project? 
  . . . 
2. Legislating Morality: a Must
Don Crawford has reflected on the US SC sodomy ruling, and has published a 
  powerful column on law and morality . . .
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=33553
statute laws are the legal enforcement of moral principles such as "Thou shalt 
  not kill." Any criminal statute you choose - whether about fraud, extortion, 
  due process, assault, ad infinitum, are the legislating of morality into the 
  criminal code . . . Not only are all statute laws the legislation of morality, 
  but furthermore it is no historical accident that it is the Judeo-Christian 
  moral code that has been legislated into Western law . . . . it is not a coincidence 
  that the West has been predominantly the world of Christendom and the fertile 
  soil from which has sprung the world's ideals of the sanctity of all human life, 
  the fundamental equality of all persons, the sovereignty of the people, due 
  process, and our basic freedoms . . . . Sadly, our system of jurisprudence with 
  all its respect for individual human rights is not the norm in the world. Rather, 
  that system springs from a particular moral system and code . . . . "What moral 
  norms should be legislated?" That is a legitimate question. And the answer is 
  we legislate a category of ethics. We legislate those ethical norms that have 
  to do with: (1) all persons being treated with equality under the law, (2) protecting 
  the weak and the innocent, and (3) protecting the general welfare. In short, 
  we legislate the area of ethics known as justice. So, are ethical norms concerning 
  sodomy and marriage appropriate matters of justice? The medical and historical 
  evidence is overwhelming - though totally ignored in the current non-factual, 
  politically correct discussion - that sodomy and marriage are appropriate norms 
  for legislation . . .
3. Pedophilia (and more) on the "normalising" agenda
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=33551
. . . this May, the American Psychiatric Association (APA) was . . . publicly 
  debating a proposal for "Lifting [The] Pedophilia Taboo." Several APA presenters 
  "proposed removing … pedophilia, exhibitionism … voyeurism … from the Diagnostic 
  and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)." The DSM - the bible of the 
  mental-health field - tells psychiatrists, judges, juries and the rest of the 
  world what is or is not abnormal human behavior, and what to criminally "punish" 
  versus what to therapeutically "treat." 
Sadly, in Literary Arts secvtion, The SunDay Magazine, Jamaica Observer, p.2; 
  a Ms Peta-Gaye Stuart has published a naive gush piece on the Pride Week events 
  in Toronto, where "same sex marriages", so called, have been ever 
  so unwisely recently given standing under the colour of law. That is, we see 
  evidence that the "normalising" of perversion is happening among the 
  Caribbean's upper and middle classes, who are most vulnerable to fashionable 
  trends in secularist, apostate and neopagan thinking.
We therefore need to read the signs of the times and respond in an informed, 
  principled way that respects people but insists that matters of justice and 
  public morality must be firmly handled in the interests of especially our children. 
  (For, the creation of a "public" domain is in the main justified by 
  the need to provide family-friendly space in the community so that our children 
  can be well brought up; with minimal exposure to inappropriate influences. Or, 
  have we forgotten?)
4. On the Slander Front . . .
First, I am saddened to have to observe that the jamaica Gleaner was found 
  by the Privy Council to have spent sixteen years sustaining a libellous accusation 
  against Mr Tony Abrams, a former Minister of Tourism. One prays that the ruling 
  will begin to motivate that media house to follow the NY Times down the path 
  of beginning to clean up its act. (Of course, on this matter, I speak as one 
  who over the past several months was unjustly attacked by a columnist and was 
  denied the effective right of reply: see http://www.angelfire.com/pro/kairosfocus/resources/1st_Easter_Timeline.htm 
  and http://www.angelfire.com/pro/kairosfocus/resources/debating_fundamentalism.htm 
  for my to date unpublished responses.)
On a similar note, the WMD debate has been heating up in the USA, with many 
  declaring or implying that the Bush Administration has been lying; a theme that 
  has been pounced upon by many of our pundits, who seem to have more of a deep 
  rooted hostility to what the US has traditionally stood for than a concern for 
  international justice -- judging by the telling silence on the ongoing Cuban 
  crackdown.
However, we would well do to heed the observations made over the weekend that 
  "smoking gun" evidence has been found on especially chemical weapons, 
  and will be forthcoming. So, let us refrain from rash pronouncements and hostility 
  rather than sound, well-considered judgement.
In that context, we should consider the points made by Clifford May in National 
  Review: 
http://www.nationalreview.com/may/may071103.asp
Mr. Bush never claimed that Saddam Hussein had purchased uranium from Niger. 
  It is not true - as USA Today reported on page one Friday morning - that "tainted 
  evidence made it into the President's State of the Union address." For the record, 
  here's what President Bush actually said in his SOTU: "The British government 
  has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium 
  from Africa." Precisely which part of that statement isn't true? The British 
  government did say that it believed Saddam had sought African uranium. Is it 
  possible that the British government was mistaken? Sure. Is it possible that 
  Her Majesty's government came by that belief based on an erroneous American 
  intelligence report about a transaction between Iraq and Niger? Yes - but British 
  Prime Minister Tony Blair and members of his Cabinet say that's not what happened. 
  They say, according to Britain's liberal Guardian newspaper, that their claim 
  was based on "extra material, separate and independent from that of the US." 
  . . . Saddam Hussein did have a nuclear-weapons-development program. That program 
  was set back twice: Once by Israeli bombers in 1981, and then a decade later, 
  at the end of the Gulf War when we learned that Saddam's nuclear program was 
  much further along than our intelligence analysts had believed. As President 
  Bush also said in the SOTU: The International Atomic Energy Agency confirmed 
  in the 1990s that Saddam Hussein had an advanced nuclear weapons development 
  program, had a design for a nuclear weapon and was working on five different 
  methods of enriching uranium for a bomb. Since Saddam never demonstrated - to 
  the U.S., the U.N., or even to Jacques Chirac - that he had abandoned his nuclear 
  ambitions, one has to conclude that he was still in the market for nuclear materials. 
  And, indeed, many intelligence analysts long believed that he was trying to 
  acquire such material from wherever he could - not just from Niger but also 
  from Gabon, Namibia, Russia, Serbia, and other sources . . .
4. Shuttled by Foam . . .
This week, there was dramatic news footage that showed that the first suspect 
  almost certainly did it: Columbia was done in by a 2 kg lump of foam that hit 
  its wing and caused a hole in the leading edge that may have been nearly a foot 
  across. The breaking up of the wing as hot plasma penetrated its interior was 
  just a matter of time. Sad. 
However, there is a not so happy environmental angle to the story: the shedding 
  problem was reportedly triggered by a shift to a more "environmentally 
  friendly" foam: http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=33545 
  . Thus, it seems there is a need for us to balance the set of factors at work 
  in a given environmentally-tinged situation, led by sound judgement, not hype 
  and hysteria.
IN CONCLUSION: I am preparing for an upcoming Conference, and so will 
  be out of circulation for a couple of weeks, please pray for this vital conference; 
  that God will help us wake up to the spiritual challenges the region faces on 
  the threshold of the new milllennium. Grace be to you all . . .
No comments:
Post a Comment